Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 April 1943 — Page 17

ESCAPES 2.DAY JAIL wiped TERM, DIES OF POISON

DETROIT, April 2 (U, P.).~ ~Traffic Referee Courtney Fitzsimmons sentenced Joseph Bell, 50, to $2 or two days in jail on a minor traffic charge.

"NUTRITIOUS DIET SOUGHT FOR ALL

Minimum Needs Should Be

Col. Churchill f Retirne fo Fort After 30-Year Absence

Col. James M. Churchill returned to Ft. Harrison as its commanding officer early yesterday after an ab gig hg in‘ All S Back in 1912-13 Col. : Ih 1-13 col. “Oni n tores at All lieutenant with the 23d infantry, Times, OPA Says.

but he was then in the early years : ; of his army career. WASHINGTON, April 2 (U. P)—|

Col. Walter S. Drys- Plans are being developed with a dale whose new duties have not view to making certain that grocery been announced, Col. Churchill was stores are supplied with the food professor of military science and necessary to provide a basic, nutritactics at Ohio university. tious diet for all, it was learned Enlisting in the service in 1901, today. he was commissioned a second lieu- Discussions have been going on tenant in 1903. During his career he between the office of price adminhas served in the Philippine islands, istration, which has charge of raPanama and in France in world tioning, and food distribution adwar I. His unit, the 811th Pioneer ministration officials for some time. infantry remained overseas follow- Some progress is reported. ing peace as part of the army qf Food production officials have occupation. given assurances that the available Resembling Winston Churchill, and prospective supplies are adeprime minister of Great Britain, quate to back up a program giving in feature as well as name, the everyone a minmum diet and allownew commanding officer of the fort ing a reasonably wide selection. says, “Circumstances indicate there As now contemplated, the plan is a relationship between us but I would work something like this: doubt if it could be proven in a Agriculture department dietary court of law. experts are developing a basic diet of foods needed to sustain health,

“Film Contract Fails to Lure Waitress From H er Trays

By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN ing for them both singing In night-| United Press Hollywood ‘Correspondent clubs. + HOLLYWOOD, April 2—Waitress| “It wasn’t steady,” Miss Sylva af : Daphnee Sylvia put a new twist to said, “It was feast or famine. Last IY 3% the standard Hollywood Cinder ella, year I saw this ad, experienced 0 i waitress wanted.” Ma) z : story today by signing a seven-year

Restaurant. proprietor = Charles " movie contract—and shicking to her|Eaton interrupted to say that she 3 % hash- ~-slinging.

hadn't been on the job 10 minutes - Hoisting a tray at Eaton's restau- gfore be RIew She g a tied a “cr Shh ice, i, and in 4 mis, i Raines or tp e De re was the best waitress in the place. ira ) ulives already| niss Sylva garnered most of her ve ordered her eyebrows plucked, % her legs pounded one size thinner,

tips from the big-wigs of Republic < and. her name changed to Jane Studios. She served them all for a * Dillon,

years, before they “discovered” her “I'm all over bruises already,”

and dished up 4° contract. *, announced Miss 8., when the lunch : ; time rush subsided. “I'm excited] PRAISES THE ‘BAZOOKA’ “ % about my movie contract all right,| WASHINGTON, April 2 (U. P.).— : but with tips I'm eaming $60 a|Congressmen were deeply impressed T week. Every week. I know some|with the army's new anti-tank . " movie actresses who don’t. As for|weapon, “The Bazooka,” which was me, I'm taking no chances.” demonstrated for them this week at Z The 23-year-old Miss Sylva is|Aberdeen proving grounds, Md. '* the daughter of Margherita Sylva,| Speaking for the senate military the grand opera star of another gen- (affairs committee, Chairman Robert eration. Mother and daughter came|R. Reynolds (D. N. C.), said: “The to Hollywood two years ago, with|Bazooka is the most appalling indaughter attempting to earn a liv-!strument of death I have ever seen.”

FITNESS PARLEY HERE SATURDAY

Physical Education Teachers and OCD Officials To Hear Kelly.

The war conference on physical fitness to be held here Saturday will draw physical education teachers and county OCD physical fitness representatives from all over the state. The meeting will be held at Washington high school and will feature a talk at 2:30 p. m. by John B. Kelly’ of Washington, assistant di-[ rector of the office of defense health and welfare services which has charge of the national physical fitness program. . The Indianapolis Association for Health, Physical Education and Recréation is sponsoring the program, and Reuben D. Behimer, president, will preside.

Demonstrate Obstacle Courses

A bust of former Vice : John Nance Garner will be pr Bell protested bitterly against the [sented to the senate soon, Col. fine and was ordered to serve the |Halsey, secretary of the senate, sentence. ‘On the way to jail he'nounced today. °

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Opening the conference will be a demonstration of obstacle courses under the direction of Miss Doris Boettjer and Henry Bogue of Washington high school. Discussion chairmen are Lyman Lyboult of Richmond and Miss Martha Bunch of Seymour high school. Miss Nancy Scramlin of Burris high school, Muncie, will lead a discussion of medical examinations, records, follow-up and use of physical fitness committees. Calisthencis and relay demonstrations

{under Miss Mabel Loehr and Mr.

Bogue will be followed by discus-

‘ision by John Scannell of Natre

Dame university and Miss Ruth Kelly, NYA recreation director: Both demonstrations are to -be given by Washington high school students. Presiding over the afternoon session will. be Mrs. Clara Hester, president-elect of the association. Boys and girls from Technical

J.| high school will demonstrate self-

testing activities, which will be discussed by Karl Bookwalter of Indiana university and Miss Irene Foster of Bloomfield high school. Washington high school pupils will demonstrate class work under Miss Boettjer and Cloyd Julian. Lloyd Messersmith of DePauw university and Mrs. Hester will speak.

Malaska to Tell of Trenches Frank Stafford, chief of the division of health and physical education of the state board of health will introduce Mr. Kelly. Highlights of physical fitness

| programs over the state will be

described as follows: rope skipping, ‘Miss Dorothy Hughes, Clinton; utilization of class time, Walter Fisher, Muncie; trench activities, Paul D. Malaska, Martinsville; rove

climbing, Verrollton Shoal, New Salem; relays, Miss Elizabeth Harrington, New Castle; use of student leaders, Miss Helen Hagelton, Purdue university; overcoming handicaps, Lorin Evans, Goshen; apparatus - activities, Vernon McKown, Vincennes. Closing the program will be movies of the physical fitness program of the navy, shown and explained by a navy. representative.

DINNER ARRANGED BY ROBISON GROUPS

The Bruce P. Robison unit 133 American Legion auxiliary, post, squadrom and junior members will hold their regular dinner meeting at 6:30 p. m. Monday in the Central Christian church. Mrs. Dale Humphrey and Mrs. Donald H. Smith will be in charge of the musical program. Misses Maria Caballeria and Carmen DeBarros of Havana, Cuba, and stu-

_ The speaker will be C. O. Warnock. Thursday evening the unit and junior group will assist with the

|i program and serving of a dinner to

be given by the 11th district American Legion honoring local board members of the selective service system. : Miss Dorothy Haupt will lead the discussion on “How New States Are Formed and Admitted.” Miss Dorothy Allbright, junior president, will preside. And at 10:30 a. m. next Friday the group will attend a meeting at. the War Memorial building. A program

| sponsored by the Children’s museum

will be given on conservation.

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“YI have been taken for the prime minister many times,” he said. “When I was 17 or 18 and in Washington high school I had my picture taken in a cadet uniform. My mother sent it to a friend in St. Louis. A letter came back . . . ‘Doesn't he look like Winston Churchill?’ ” Col. Churchill is a graduate of the army war college, the general staff school, the school of the line, infantry school and the field officers’ course. : And when his family gathers there is gold braid aplenty. His son

Col. James H. Churchill

James Jr. is ‘a lieutenant colonel in North Africa as is the husband of his daughter Alice. And at West Point is the husband of daughter Laura. He, too, is a lieutenant cclonel. Mrs. Churchill will join her husband here soon.

This'll Keep Bunny From V-Gardens

ELKHART, Ind. April 2 (U. P)—Albert Hansen, Elkhart county game warden, offered a suggestion today to victory gare deners who fear rabbits will damage their vegetables. : He said they should tie inflated paper bags to short stakes 10 to 15 feet apart around the garden so the wind ‘will rustle the bags and frighten the bunnies away. Hansen had no suggestion about what to do on windless nights.

STRIKE THREATENS IN BIG COPPER MINE

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, April 2 (U, P.)—A strike which would deprive the nation of one-third of its vital copper supply will be called despite threatened drafting of strikers because “employees would rather be in the army than under labor dicfatorship,” union officials said today. ‘W. Reed Damron, president of the independent association of mill workers, said nowever that the union “was 100 per cent behind the army and the war manpower commission’s efforts” to avert a threatenéd strike at the Magha and Arthur plants of the Utah Copper Co. ‘ Two thousand employees of the company, the nation’s largest producer of copper, voted Monday to strike to hasten WLB consideration of demands for a 25-cent daily wage increase. The board. had rejected earlier demands on the ground that the union was not recognized by

federal agencies.

COLLECTION OF GROSS TAX UP

1st Quarter of 1943 Sets Record, but Total for Year Drops.

State gross income tax collections during the first quarter of 1943:set an all-time high for quarterly collections, $16,851,000 being collected, Gilbert K. Hewit, division director, reported today. The $16,851,000 represents annual and fourth quarter payments for the calendar year 1942. However, while the first quarter collections were the highest in history, they did not bring the total collections for the year ending on April 1 up to the previous yearly period, only $33,336,000 .being collected as compared to $34,043,000 in the former 12-month period. Retailers’ Rate Cut The decrease in collections for the yearly period was due to the reduction in the retailers’ rate of tax from one to one-half of one per cent effective Jan. 1, 1942. Mr. Hewit said that the department is now mailing approximately 100,000 returns to those who pay gross income tax quarterly. - Quarterly returns are required when the tax due for the quarter is in excess of $10. He pointed out that the gross income tax law was amended by the last legislature to change the time for filing quarterly returns from the 15th of the month following the close of the calendar quarfer to the last day of such month.

The two greatest developments in medicine in the last half century have been antiseptics and anesthesia, says Dr. Thomas R. Noble

And he’s got 50 years of service as a practicing physician to back up that belief. Yesterday he rounded out the 50th year by working as usual in his office in the HumeMansur building. Friends and former patients came in to offer congratulations and last night friends and his family gathered for a little party at his home, 4800 Michigan sd. Dr. Noble is the third Dr. Thomas B. Noble, and his son, Dr. Thomas B. Noble Jr. is the fourth by that name. -Dr. Noble Sr. can tell some pretty gruesome tales of the prac-

told to him by his father and grandfather. There are stories of necessary surgery performed by force on

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Dr. Noble Marks 50th Year; Praises Gains in Surgery

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May Revise Point List *

In order to make good the “guarantee,” the food distribution administration would undertake to see that every grocery store is kept supplied with the foods that go to make up the minimum diet. The office of price administration would arrange coupon values so that each housewife could purchase the necessary food, and perhaps have a few left over for extras as they are available. StocKpiles of staple foods included | in the standard diet might be located within convenient reach of all stores, so that a store running short of any item could replenish it quickly. Nutrition experts say ration allowances first announced, especially on canned fruits and vegetables, are insufficient to maintain health and working efficiency, unless supplemented with large amounts of foods not on the ration list. ‘Tdo great a reliance, some food officials believe, was placed on the availability of fresh vegetables in ‘all localities.

$3000 TRUCKLOAD OF LIQUOR IS HIJACKED

CHICAGO, April 2 (U. P.). ~The | art of hijacking was revived in| Chicago today when four bandits | drove off with a truckload of Leggo, valued at $3000. In prohibition era fashion, the | four men entered the garage of a trucking firm, and forced seven eni- | ployees to load a truck with 200! cases of liquor. The bandits then | locked the seven men in ee

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HOLD PUBLIC CARD PARTY | Community council 47 Daughters of America will sponsor a public card party at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow at Maywood hall. Mrs. Harry Hohlt is chairman.

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beds, the operation over,” he said. “Before the days eof anesthetics and antiseptics, the abdoninal, thoacic ‘and cranial cavities rarely were entered because of the high mortality of such operations. Since their development, any cavity in the body can be entered with perfect security, and the increasing knowledge -of anatomy and pathology also makes tor the security of the

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